Tuesday, 30 August 2016

I'm back again! This time around, the story is from a friend sharing some interesting thoughts...:

pic
source: forfriendsforever.wordpress.com

The 21st Century Relationship(s)

As a child I watched my folks and how they related
with friends, most of which were bosom and from childhood. They chatted about
growing up, what the village was like, walking to school, farm, market to sell
goods with mama, going to the stream to fetch water, wash, and play. How they
all grew up, got married and are scattered around the world. What amazed
me was how they all supported each other and gathered together every time there
was an event (good or bad). I picked a lesson from their relationship - sacrifice
keeps true friendship.

The English dictionary defines a friend as a
person with whom one has a bond of mutual affection, typically one exclusive of
sexual or family relations. The bible in Proverbs 18:4 defines a friend
as one who sticks closer than a brother. With these definitions let
me talk about the 21st century friendship.

I like to use myself or people around me as examples. Since birth till
date (least that I know am an adult now), I can count how many friends have
come and gone. I am compelled to write this based on experiences with
friends; speaking to others made me realise that everyone had a thing or two to
say about friendship.

The 21st century friendship is a carnivorous one.
We feed off each other, we can only be friends when there's a need or benefit
from it. Unknowingly, the 21st century friendship can be described as ‘use and
dump’. My realisation from the old and new generation is that as
technology evolved so did friendship. It grew from making sacrifices, trusting
each other, sticking up for each other etc. to convenience, lies, being
two-faced etc. Someone once told me that friends could mar or make you.
So it's important to choose wisely. A school of thought says that like minds
attract each other. I think it's become something material that attracts one (money,
beauty, brains, contracts, wealth, influence etc.). I once knew that
friendship had these few characteristics: Trust, sacrifice, tolerance,
sticking up for each other etc. The modern day friendship is filled with lies, deceit,
jealousy and so much negativity.

This even applies to relationships. A young man
meets a lady his attracted to and all he thinks of is how to sleep with her and
all the many things she has to offer physically as opposed to getting to know
her (personality, background, temperance, religion, beliefs, ideologies,
intellect) etc. I once met a young man who went with me to meet my
friends for our Friday night hangout. It was our (I and the young man) first
time of meeting and I appreciated the gesture of taking me to meet with friends
and bringing me back home. In my little head, I was thinking that maybe we will
do this again - just the two of us and get to know each other better, but of
course he ruined it when he kissed me. At that moment, I froze but since the
car was off, I played along and kissed him back. Maybe I shouldn't have kissed
back, but at that moment I couldn't think straight. I guess that's the price to
pay for hopping into free rides. I can't get that scene out of my head, every time
I reminisce about the world we live in, I can't help but think we live in a
rotten age.

With all my research and experience from failed
relationships, I ponder what will be left of this generation and the future
generations if relationships are based on all of the above listed.I pray someone who reads this learns to savage
relationships. Let’s add a little spice from the old generation friendship to
our new school friendship and make the best from it. I drop my pen here, till
next time when my thought takes me elsewhere.

I am not a conventional writer but I felt inspired to this. I hope it
enriches someone.

Thank y'all for reading and as usual, please comment, share with a "friend" :) and remain blessed.

Monday, 1 August 2016

Happy new month! I cannot believe that it is already August, wow! I know that it's been ages since I wrote and posted on my blog. I have missed writing but to be fair, I have been doing some other types of writing :). Just a reminder that my last BellaNaija post can be found here and hopefully you will get more from me soon. I also hope to resume writing more often so watch out please. Today's story is something I hope many can relate to so please read, comment and share with your friends. I wish you a lovely month filled with beautiful things.

photo credit:
thegoodhairdiaries.blogspot.com

THE
ONLY BLACK WOMAN

It was good news! Hali
had just received a scholarship to go and study abroad. She was excited and
looking forward to a new opportunity but at the same time she felt sad because
she would have to leave her friends and relatives and go far away. Presently,
she did not live in her country, Ethiopia, but she still felt at home in Kenya.
Not only were the two countries close to each other, she had friends and
relatives living there too and she could easily find her native foods to eat. In
fact, there were so many similarities that it felt like she had never left
home.

Hali had made the
perfect friends; she always thought to herself of how lucky she had been. There
was the talkative Hewan, the sweet and gentle Liza, the event planner Kibre and
the religious Temar. They were all course mates and had just finished their Bachelor’s
degree in biological sciences. From the first day they met, there had been a
strong connection and although it was unintentional, they had formed a girl squad
with themselves. They were always together and very protective of one another
and barely spoke to their other schoolmates. None of them had a boyfriend and unknown
to them, they were seen as snobs, with rumours even being perpetuated that they
were a lesbian cult group. However, they never noticed as they were engrossed
in each other’s life throughout their four years of study. Hali’s travel was
therefore a big change in their lives. Of course, Temar, Hewan, Liza and Kibre
were happy for Hali but they were also sad to say goodbye. Hali was not just
leaving Kenya but she was going far away to the United States of America to further
her education and get a Master’s degree in Pharmacology. The other girls were not
yet ready for a second degree; Hewan wanted to work first and earn some money; Temar
wanted to become a business woman; Liza, who was an only child, wanted to get
married and start a family; and Kibre was not yet sure of what she wanted and
wanted to take a year out. That was the beauty of the group; even though
everyone else outside the group saw them as the same kind of girls; they all
had very different personalities and goals.

The night before Hali
left the country, the other girls threw her a farewell party. It was no
surprise that only a few people attended since they had not exactly been friendly
with other people. Nonetheless, it was an emotional party. They exchanged
gifts, recounted their favorite moments and made plans on how to keep in touch.
Towards the end of the night, Hali became more nervous as reality dawned on her
that she was leaving indeed to a new continent, where she knew no one and
especially to a state where she heard that there were barely any black people. As
the girls packed up to leave her apartment, Hali grabbed Kibre’s hands, the
most outgoing one amongst them whom she trusted to continue to organize their
friendly meetings.

With tears in her eyes,
she said to Kibre “Promise me that you will keep in touch and you will make sure
that the others do, please.”

Kibre made the first
promise and with that all the other girls made their vows too. It was not going
to be difficult, they assured Hali. She would quickly make friends, but their
friendship would remain solid and once they got good jobs or husbands or figured
out whatever they wanted to do with their lives, they would get US visas and
pay her a visit hopefully within a year. They also promised to Skype regularly
during the weekends, since they all had access to the internet and with these,
Hali felt more confident about their friendship. The next morning, she left
with the earliest plane for the state of Vermont in the USA.

As soon as she alighted
from the plane, Hali could feel the difference. Nothing was similar to where
she had come from and nothing looked familiar. There was no East African at the
airport or in her school hostel, or in her classroom, or in her church. Everywhere
she went, she looked around for East Africans but as the days went by, she began
to realise that she was being too optimistic. Any African would do, she eventually thought to herself and after
weeks with no success, she wished for any ‘black’ person. When months had gone
by and she had still found none, she settled for looking for any ‘coloured’
person. It was not because she had any problem with making Caucasian friends
but she just wanted somebody that she could share her spicy foods with and
someone who understood her afro hair. She had become so spoilt in Kenya that
now it was difficult for her to do certain things for herself like making her hair
and doing her own make up. There were times that she considered going to the
neighbouring city as she heard that there were more diversities in the population
but as time went on and with the increasing school work, she gave up on the
chase. She became used to being the only black person there and she even
nicknamed herself “the only black woman”.

Hali tried to keep in
touch with her friends in Kenya from the day she arrived in the states. She
already had a lot to tell them but the time difference was a barrier as when
she was up in the morning, they were already going to bed and vice versa. Their
first group skype call was scheduled for the weekend after she arrived. All of
them attended but the call barely took place as the internet connection was
horrible for some reason on that day. Only Temar showed up during the next
meeting scheduled a couple of weeks after, because Kibre had begun her travels,
Temar was having a training for a new job and Liza had just gotten a new
boyfriend with whom she was out with. Hewan, she learnt, had fallen out with
the group shortly after she left for the states. Hali and Temar spoke for a
short while; the conversation was awkward and that was when she realised that
she had never really had anything in common with Temar and they had never spent
time alone before throughout their college years. Somehow spending time in a
group was different from spending time alone. Therefore, Hali looked forward to
the full group meetings but that never took place because one weekend after the
other, there was always an excuse for it not to happen. Hali tried to reach out
to them individually via Facebook, WhatsApp and other apps but after a while, it
seemed like she was the only one making the efforts and nobody else was
interested. Thus, after some months, she was no longer in touch with any of
them and it was via Facebook that she found out that Kibre and Hewan had gotten
married, Liza had returned home to Ethiopia and Temar had started her small
business in costume jewelry.

Hali had not been
invited to any of the weddings and even when she tried to reach out to
congratulate her friends on their accomplishments, she received bland
responses. It became clear that she had either been ostracized from the group
or that the group did not exist again. There were moments when Hali felt lonely
and she would sit in her room, going through her picture albums and the parting
gifts from her former friends. She reminisced on the great times they had spent
together and she wondered how things could have changed so quickly. She cried
whenever she remembered the promise that Kibre and the other girls had made and
how no one had cared to keep them. She made up her mind to be strong and get
used to her new life or else she would get depressed.

Almost two years had
gone by and Hali was rounding up her master’s program. She was looking forward
to moving out to a new city and finding a job immediately after she finished. She
was in the final stages of her Master’s thesis and had to spend long hours in
the laboratory, thus making her return home late at night sometimes. It was on
one of those nights as she was going home that she passed by a lady. At first,
she did not notice as she had been absent minded but she looked again and there
she was - it was another black woman! She stood in shock as the woman continued
her way in the opposite direction. She felt the urge to run after her and say
something but she knew it would come off as creepy so she just stood there until
she could no longer see her. When she got home that night, she slept well for
the first time since she arrived in the country. It was as if the new woman had
brought a new hope into her life. She prayed that she would see her again and
her prayers were answered a week after. She ran into the woman again just about
the same time and same place and that day, she decided to say hi. They spoke
for a few minutes. Her name was Mirabel: she was from Jamaica and had moved
there recently with her family. She was quite older than Hali and was married
with two children. Hali tried to contain her excitement and continued to ask
many questions. The woman was on her way to work; she was a night nurse at the
nearby hospital and so she had to leave.

After that day, Hali
ran into the woman almost every week that she worked late at the laboratory. They
would greet each other pleasantly but briefly. And although, Hali would have
loved to build a stronger friendship with her, she did not want to start
something that would leave her heartbroken again like her former friends. She also
did not think that they would have many things in common given the age
difference or the time to hang out as much as they were both busy. However,
every night that they passed by each other, Hali would feel a strange feeling
of joy and would sleep like a baby. Somehow, Mirabel’s smile reminded Hali of
Liza, her hair style reminded her of Kibre, she had the same colour of eyes as
Temar and the way she walked reminded her of Hewan. In Mirabel, she had found
happiness and began to feel less lonely and although, Mirabel would never know,
Hali had made a new nickname for both of them and every time after they passed
and greeted each other, she would whisper “the only black women.”

Saturday, 4 June 2016

I know it's been ages but I have been super busy! Oh well, I shan't bore you with details because today I've got a nice story from the write - Mr. Etoh. So enjoy, share and please comment. Thank you:)

IN HER
EXPERTISE

“The very reason I stopped, later became the sole reason why I
decided to push, and I mean ensure that I got to the bottom of the whole thing.
It was taking over me; I couldn’t think straight anymore, and one time I almost
burnt down my apartment after I left an empty pot on the gas cooker for more
than an hour.”

I stopped to look at Ms. Funmi; she didn’t seem like she had taken
her gaze off me.

“Yes…yes go on, I’m with you” she said without me even asking her
anything.

I really wasn’t used to telling people my worries or problems, I
just felt they would only end up laughing at me in their judgmental minds, and
worse still I wouldn’t get any close to getting back my lost life. But
something about Ms. Funmi seemed different, she said little or nothing, and she
smiled at almost everything I tell her, and then she would say “it is well”,
well I just hope she isn’t as insane as I thought I was.

All the same, everyone had wanted me to speak to someone, someone
who would advice me on my current dilapidated state of well being. And after
months of refusing, and after my wife left home citing marriage breakdown as
her reasons, it became pertinent that I solve this problem that I probably
think has left me looking cancerous to others.

“At work I couldn’t do little tasks like write memos or draft a
course of action, something I originally had been doing for over three years.”
I had continued after she gave me the go ahead, “I started to get angry at
every slight thing that wasn’t even supposed to make me blink, and I think what
I noticed was that I started to get irritated easily by anyone who ventured to
ask about my well being.

“Ok, let me cut you there” she interrupted for the first time
since we started conversing for more than three hours now.

“I need you to tell me how it all started, this whole change, like
can you remember?” she had stopped talking before I knew it, and I had
forgotten what she talked about.

I motioned to her, trying to understand if she had asked me a
question.

“Gbenga!!!” she shouted straight into my face.

“Yes” I replied looking away from her.

“I really do not want to assume you’re sick or suffering from
something only God knows. I decided to help you because I believe everyone’s
got a second chance at bettering their lives, so I urge you to come out of your
shelf so we both can help you out of this mess.” Then she stopped talking, and
bent her head so that it rested on her right fist.

The room was quiet for about twenty seconds, I didn’t know what to
say, I had gotten used to her starting off a point, my own was to give a reply
to her questions, and ensure I followed exactly her procedures. She then she got
up from her chair, went behind me, placed her hands on my shoulders and so fast
she started to caress them, soon to my back and then down my hips. After about
a minute of intense massaging and body touching, she bent that her mouth was
directly proportional with my ears, and then she whispered “let me help you
relax…..ok?”

I had no idea if she expected an answer from me, or if she needed
a thumbs up in respect of her question, I was indifferent, especially when I
actually didn’t major in psychology, so I really didn’t think she expected me
to have any clue as to how she would make me relax.

“Ride on Miss Psychologist” was all I could say deep down in my
heart.

“So tell me about your sex life, were you having enough of it?” as
she spoke her hands found their way into my shirt.

“I really can’t say, but my wife wasn’t exactly the kind that
loved frequent sex, she preferred it occasionally and well prepared kind of
sex” I could swear I knew nothing of what I had just said, Miss Funmi hands
were causing so much havoc in my mind.

“Ok” that sounded like she was dozing off.

I never cared to turn to look at her, all I was sure was that she
was the professional here, and for me, getting back my life was most
fundamental at the moment, and not how she got to the end.

“And were you against having routine sex or should I say were you
the everyday sex kind of guy”

“Yes and No…emm…sometimes I come home so tired and wouldn’t
venture into sex. But other times I really would be a hundred percent ready for
it.” And again I didn’t know how that came out of my mouth.

Miss Funmi had her hands already caressing the part of my trousers
where the zips were tailored to. At first it was great and I felt the moon on
my ears with the clouds giving me the soothing of a lifetime. Miss Funmi’s
touches were unconditionally eccentric, and I started to float as soon as
possible, and my lips became so dry so that I began searching for something wet
to infuse into it.

Everything happened so fast and I didn’t know how to tell her that
this was exactly my problem. That I was HIV positive and the knowledge of my
predicament had made me a ghost of myself, because as it is, I was simply
awaiting death and a very cruel one indeed. But only if my psychologist would
have been so professional enough to have understood that I needed help from my imminent
destruction, instead of becoming trapped in it. We had a very hot and long
romantic evening that lasted for about four hours, and everytime my realities
came flashing its ugly head at me, Ms. Funmi would kiss my lips and say to me
“put that behind you, lay all your worries on me.”

And yes indeed, I did lay all my worries in and on her, the bad
thing was that it never left me, but I succeeded in passing it to yet another
person.

As we lay on the bed after a breath taking performance, she
started to say how much she had enjoyed every piece of me, and how she wished
we never stopped. I looked at her with pity, funny enough she thought my eyes
were so sexy, and every time she would kiss them, and say that my eyes were
capable of making her happy for life, only if she knew the truth that lay
beneath it. I was seconds away from trying to live my life at least for another
week, but Ms. Funmi the psychologist had come along, and taken me back to where
I was a week before I was introduced to her. What kind of psychologist was she
anyway? Instead of helping me, she has eaten a great chunk of my worries.

How will I break this news to her, how on earth will I say to her
that I am HIV positive, and that was the reason why I have been living like a
country plagued with famine and war. All because of pleasure, and my love for ecstatic
feelings, I have plunged yet another soul into total catastrophe, and I know
she will live never to forgive me. And although I think and feel pity for her,
Funmi still finds my manhood so attractive that she cannot stop putting it
inside her mouth like she was promised gold in the Olympics for it. The same
object that has caused me an avalanche of pains is what Funmi treasures and
wishes she had it in her bedroom, to play with every night she gets home from
work.

I regret meeting Funmi today, just the same way I have regretted
meeting every woman that I eventually slept with, because up till date I really
do not know who had given me this Greek gift. I want to think about my life,
and I wish Funmi will let go of it before it kills her in my presence.

Monday, 28 March 2016

Happy Easter Monday! I hope you had a wonderful
Lenten season and Easter break.My last article on Bellanaija is here.

Photo source: www.50img.com

For Christians, Easter
is one of the most important celebrations in the church. This is because we are
reminded of how we became saved by the Grace of God through the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ. The 40 day period preceding this event is a time
to reflect on the suffering and death of Jesus Christ and to become closer to
him. Many Christians especially Catholics try to fast or at least abstain from
certain things; one of the key messages is to give up something loved to share
in the suffering as well as to do good unto others. This year Easter came quite
early, in March, because many times in the past, it fell in April. I know it
has fallen on my birthday before, in 2011. Anyway, I just thought to share a reflection
of my Easter season:

For me, Lent this year
was one of the most serious one for me. I tried new prayers, new habits, tried
to give up old habits that were not the best (including coffee, lol). In
retrospect, I do not remember attending any stations of the cross this year L…I’m
sure they had some at my church but maybe I was busy working. However, I felt
really grown this season, both physically and spiritually by His grace.
Physically, I felt more mature because I did not try to sit down during the
long ‘Passion of Christ’ reading read on Palm Sunday and on Good Friday!
Usually, halfway, I would sit or kneel or squat or keep flipping through the
pages…..because that reading is very long, from the trial of Jesus to his death
and burial. But this year, I was calm and I even enjoyed the reading.

Holy Thursday or Maundy
Thursday was an interesting day as the washing of feet of his disciples
emulated by the priest is always humbling. I believe that the message here is
that for you to be a leader or master, you must learn to serve. I have been
blessed to have my feet washed previous a couple of years ago and this year, the priest said that we should
learn to was the feet of our partners, family, loved ones and even enemies!

Good Friday service was
another good one for me. It was as sullen as usual, without the sign of the
cross or sign of peace. The veneration of the cross always reminds me of the
crucifixion of Jesus. If you’re a germaphobic
like one of my siblings, you will find it hard to kiss or even touch the cross.
I remember my mum had to send my brother one year to go back to kiss the cross
as he had just gone to the front and turned around without doing anything, hee
hee. During the reading, I was reminded of and medidated on the last words of
Jesus on the cross:

"Father,
forgive them, for they do not know what they do." Luke 23:34…this was when
the soldier and some others were mocking Him on the cross.

"Truly,
I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise." Luke 23:43…He said
this to this thief who believed that asked to be remembered in His paradise.

"Jesus
said to his mother: "Woman, this is your son." Then he said to the
disciple: "This is your mother." John 19:26-27… This was when He
handed his mother to John for care.

"My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" Matthew 27:46 and Mark 15:34…I can’t
even begin to imagine the pain He must have felt.

"I
thirst." Gospel of John 19:28…this was to fulfil the scripture of giving Him
wine to drink.

"It
is finished.” Gospel of John 19:29-30…I believe his work on earth as a being
was finished.

"Father,
into your hands I commend my spirit." Gospel of Luke 23:46…unto God, we
should commit all things.

After the service,
everyone was asked to leave the church quietly as usual and Saturday was a
quiet day.

Easter Sunday came yesterday
and once again, we could sing Alleluia and dance and make the sign and kiss of
peace. I always love Easter Sunday as I fell liberated after all the quiet lent
season. The mass was beautiful with singing and to add to it, I ate jellof rice
yesterday (although it was Ghanaian jellof..ha ha!)

So this is a summary of
my celebration. In as much as the Lent season is over, I hope that we continue
with whatever good work that we started and stick to better behaviours. I wish
you a continuous wonderful Easter celebration and a blessed April.

PS: Does anyone know
the origin of Easter bunnies and eggs and most importantly, what rabbits have
to do with eggs?? I’m just curious. Please share if you do, thanks.

Saturday, 27 February 2016

It’s been a while; very busy year already but I trust you have been good. I thought I would share a story with you before the month of February ends (I cannot believe how quickly the year is going!). My last Bellanaija post can be found here and today my writing is titled:

THE LAST
CONFESSION

picture source:www.calledtocommunion.com

It was the season of lent, a period of solemnity for Catholics.
Adaobi was a staunch catholic or at least she came from such a family. Therefore,
for her, this was a time to be in a ‘state of grace’ and holiness. Although she
was a regular church-goer, she felt guilty for not going for confessions for
over a year. The problem was not that she could not find the time to pour out
her sins or a priest to absolve her from them but she did not feel comfortable
revealing some of her deepest secrets to the parish priest, Father Joseph.
Father Joseph was a nice and humble priest but he knew her family and thought the
best of them. He also thought of Adaobi as a responsible, charitable, young
woman with a strong faith in the Lord. It was his high regard for her that had
made him entrust her with more responsibilities in the church including leading
the Sunday morning mass readings, Bible studies on Wednesdays and counting the offering
money from the congregation. She was also a member of other renowned church
groups as well as the choir even though her voice was quite below mediocre. Father
Joseph always sang her praises to his parishioners and even referred other
young women to Adaobi whenever they seemed to be going astray from the Lord.

While one could have thought that these actions would
have made Adaobi feel more at home in the parish, they almost had the opposite
effect on her. She found herself pretending when she did not want to, attending
church service where she was barely paying attention and receiving Holy
Communion even when she did not feel worthy to do so. She only hoped that the
Lord would understand and not punish her too hard for her actions. She desperately
longed for a confession as she had been carrying some heavy sins in her heart
for over a year but could not bring herself to tell the parish priest. It was
not that she thought her sins were unforgivable but she felt that her reputation
was at stake in the church. Yes, she knew that priests were not allowed to
judge people making confessions or even tell another person about them but she
still felt that he would not see her in the same way if he knew what she was
capable of. And so she had made up her mind to never confess to Father Joseph unless
she was about to die and he was the only available priest.

The week before Easter came and her prayers seemed to
be answered. Father Joseph had travelled to attend to some urgent family
matters and a priest from a different church was in charge of Mass that day. There
had been other guest priests visiting her church parish in the past but Father Joseph
had also been present always and so would still be the one doing the
confessions. This day was different as he was away and this new priest, who
looked quite old, announced at the end of the church service that he would wait
behind for anyone who wanted to confess. He was a funny, elderly man who claimed
that he was partially deaf and so would not even hear most of the confessors,
which was a good incentive for them to come forward. Adaobi decided to take
this long awaited opportunity and sat behind in church after the service was
over.

She was the first on the queue but she decided that
she would go last because she had a lot to say and assumed that the new priest
would give her a long list of things to do as penance for her sins. She remembered
long ago when she had heard about some priests asking people to cut grasses or
do hard labour as an act of penance. She did not mind and was willing to do
anything to atone for her sins. Her only prayer was that the priest would not
ask her for details of anything that she was going to tell him. Her turn
quickly came and she went into the confession room.

“Bless me Father for I have sinned” she started while
he began his prayer.

“It is now 18
months since my last confession.” She paused, waiting for a reaction but got
none and so she continued.

“Since my last confession, I have not been very
trusting in the Lord. I have told several lies and I have been disobedient to
my parents.” She had decided to start with the lesser sins.

“I have also fornicated, not once, or twice or thrice.
Actually, I have fornicated a lot especially last year with my boyfriend.” She took
a deep breath before she concluded her confession.

“For these sins I have confessed and the ones that I have not (she whispered) and the ones I cannot remember,
I am truly sorry.”

“Are you still
together? You and your boyfriend” The priest asked.

“No, we have broken up now.” Adaobi replied, hoping
that he would ask her no more about the topic.

“It is good that you have ended your ungodly
relationship and returned to God. The good Lord has forgiven you so try not to
enter such relationships again in the future.” He said.

The priest then gave her some short prayers for her
penance to her surprise and then she was asked to say an act of contrition which
she did. Afterwards, he prayed for her sins to be absolved and permitted her to
go.

Just as she was about to leave, she added in a low
voice “Oh, I also had to abort his baby which I was carrying after we broke up.”
She paused and she heard the priest grunt although he did not say anything. She
took his silence as a permission for her to continue.

“I also stole some money from the church offering to
carry out the abortion.” The priest was silent.

“I am very sorry for that too.” She said.

He remained silent.

She hoped that he was not annoyed with her for almost
starting a new confession after finishing one. After a few minutes of silence,
she assumed that his partial deafness had returned and he probably had not
heard her. So she repeated the latter sins a bit louder but there was still no
response. It was then that she looked closer at him and noticed that he was no longer
breathing. The new priest had died during her confession! Adaobi was confused;
she ran out into the church but no other person was left there since she had
been the last one to go in for confession. She did not want to be caught in the
middle of a scene in the church and so she ran away. On her way home, she
wondered if her sins had given the priest a heart attack and killed him but
most importantly, she wondered if all her previous sins had been forgiven
because she knew that she would never confess those ones again.

Thank you for reading and as usual, please leave your comments below and kindly share with friends. Have a blessed week and follow me on:

About Me

A little something about me, hmmm....I love to write (obviously, hee hee) so I decided to start this blog after a little push from my friends and family. Some people describe me as sarcastic and funny but I love to take myself serious, lol. I like hot yoga, i don't like snow, i'm still learning how to ...

Read my blog; follow me on twitter @vivio_gogo and instagram@ugochiukah to learn more about me.